When assessing the two solutions, reviewers found Firebase easier to use, set up, and administer. Reviewers also preferred doing business with Firebase overall.
The features that I like about Firebase is the Real Time Update, is easy to install for beginner programmers. built-in authentication services (Google, Facebook, GitHub and Twitter). Integration with modern frameworks Angularjs, Ionic, React, Ember,...
Firebase database even though it is easy to use and easy to setup. If you look at the documentation you'll see even for paid version the usage caps at a certain point. So it is not suitable for corporate products.
I'm using some other crash report and analytics (in parallell, for different clients), and Flurry seems the best. Crashlytics is good for other things, like beta reporting, fast installation, and so on. But, in productive environments, I use, with no doubt,...
nothing it's a really solid tool backed by yahoo. Nothing really to complain about. Perhaps in a few months of usage I'll see some crashes or issues but that has not come up yet. I guess you could always hope for a free, open source solution, but...
The features that I like about Firebase is the Real Time Update, is easy to install for beginner programmers. built-in authentication services (Google, Facebook, GitHub and Twitter). Integration with modern frameworks Angularjs, Ionic, React, Ember,...
I'm using some other crash report and analytics (in parallell, for different clients), and Flurry seems the best. Crashlytics is good for other things, like beta reporting, fast installation, and so on. But, in productive environments, I use, with no doubt,...
Firebase database even though it is easy to use and easy to setup. If you look at the documentation you'll see even for paid version the usage caps at a certain point. So it is not suitable for corporate products.
nothing it's a really solid tool backed by yahoo. Nothing really to complain about. Perhaps in a few months of usage I'll see some crashes or issues but that has not come up yet. I guess you could always hope for a free, open source solution, but...